TvT Uhm so yeah this is really ugly and really sucks but I get a LOT of questions about perspective and how I go about doing it. ;w; The simple answer is: I CHEAT WITH A SYSTEM OF MATHEMATICALLY PERFECT LINES ON AN IMAGINARY GRID.

....xD or something.

;w; Hopefully it makes sense.....Q 3 Q I uhh, i'm really not the best person to be teaching this because I only recently got an understanding of it myself, but....TvT W-well I want to help others as best I can succeed, so if what little I know can help then I think its worth it~And again sorry for the ugliness, I just wanted to make something fast to help~

xD Copy pasta: basically, it more of a matter of scale. You have to understand height-size relations between the person and their environment. For example, if you know that your character is 5'5 and that the fridge standing next to them is 69 inches (5'9), then you would draw them four inches shorter than the fridge. You can apply this to whatever the closest object is to your character, then draw in all the perspective closer or farther from them if it becomes a large issue. //end copy pasta

This is what I have trouble with. How do you draw people in a perspective setting such as here? Whenever I attempt to do so, the person or people either end up coming out too small or too large for the scene.

;3; Its kind of hard to explain... but basically, it more of a matter of scale. You have to understand height-size relations between the person and their environment. For example, if you know that your character is 5'5 and that the fridge standing next to them is 69 inches (5'9), then you would draw them four inches shorter than the fridge. You can apply this to whatever the closest object is to your character, then draw in all the perspective closer or farther from them if it becomes a large issue. TvT I hope that makes sense!~